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Part 1 Solutions.

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Presentation on theme: "Part 1 Solutions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Part 1 Solutions

2 Making solutions Whether the solute and the solvent are polar, nonpolar, or ionic determines How much will dissolve. Whether a substance will dissolve. A substance dissolves faster if- It is stirred or shaken. The particles are made smaller. The temperature is increased. Why?

3 Stirring In order to dissolve the solvent molecules must touch the solute. Solvent molecules hold on to and surround the solute Stirring moves fresh solvent next to the solute. Dissolves faster

4 Particle size The solvent touches the surface of the solute.
Solute – what gets dissolved in the solvent Smaller pieces increase the amount of surface of the solute. Solvent and solute touch each other more often Smaller particles dissolve faster

5 Temperature Higher temperature makes the molecules of the solvent move around faster and contact the solute harder and more often. More pieces are broken off Speeds up dissolving. Usually increases the amount of solid that will dissolve.

6 How Much? Dissolved particles are surrounded by solvent particles
Eventually solvent particles are all occupied Begin turning back to solid Equilibrium reached where dissolved particles are turning to solid as fast as solid is being dissolved No more will dissolve

7 How Much? Solubility- The maximum amount of substance that will dissolve at that temperature (usually g/L). Saturated solution- Contains the maximum amount of solid that can be dissolved. Unsaturated solution- Can dissolve more solute. Supersaturated- A solution that is temporarily holding more than it can, a seed crystal will make it come out

8 Liquids Miscible means that two liquids can dissolve in each other.
Immiscible means they can’t

9 Why does Italian dressing separate
Why does Italian dressing separate? A) Oil and vinegar are immiscible B) Oil is nonpolar and vinegar polar C) Vinegar particles are attracted to themselves more than they are attracted to the oil particles. D) All of the above

10 What affects solubility?
For solids in liquids as the temperature goes up the solubility goes up. (usually) For gases in a liquid as the temperature goes up the solubility goes down. Thermal pollution

11 What affects solubility?
For gases in a liquid- as the partial pressure goes up the solubility goes up. Oxygen for patients As gas pressure goes down, solubility goes down The bends

12 Measuring Solutions

13 Concentration A measure of the amount of solute dissolved in a certain amount of solvent. Concentrated solution has a large amount of solute. Dilute solution has a small amount of solute Separate from Saturated / unsaturated

14 Concentration units Sometimes g/L or g/mL or g/100 mL.
But chemical reactions don’t happen in grams

15 Molarity The number of moles of solute in 1 Liter of the solution.
M = moles/Liter What is the molarity of a solution with 2.0 moles of NaCl in 4.0 Liters of solution.

16 Molarity The number of moles of solute in 1 Liter of the solution.
M = moles/Liter What is the molarity of a solution with 2.0 moles of NaCl in 4.0 Liters of solution.

17 Molarity What is the molarity of a solution with 3.0 moles dissolved in 250 mL of solution. What is the molarity of 200g of NaCl in 2L of solution

18 Molarity What is the molarity of a solution with 3.0 moles dissolved in 250 mL of solution.

19 Making solutions Pour in a small amount of solvent
Then add the solute and dissolve it Then fill to final volume. M x L = moles How many moles of NaCl are needed to make 6.0 L of a 0.75 M NaCl solution?

20 Making solutions Pour in a small amount of solvent
Then add the solute and dissolve it Then fill to final volume. M x L = moles How many moles of NaCl are needed to make 6.0 L of a 0.75 M NaCl solution?

21 Making Solutions How many grams of CaCl2 are needed to make 625 mL of a 2.0 M solution?

22 Making solutions How many grams of CaCl2 are needed to make 625 mL of a 2.0 M solution?

23 Making Solutions 10.3 g of NaCl are dissolved in a small amount of water then diluted to 250 mL. What is the concentration?

24 Making solutions 10.3 g of NaCl are dissolved in a small amount of water then diluted to 250 mL. What is the concentration?

25 Making Solutions How many grams of sugar are needed to make 125 mL of a 0.50 M C6H12O6 solution?

26 Making solutions How many grams of sugar are needed to make 125 mL of a 0.50 M C6H12O6 solution?

27 Adding solvent to a solution
Dilution

28 Dilution The number of moles of solute doesn’t change if you add more solvent. The moles before = the moles after M1 x V1 = M2 x V2 M is concentration and V is volume. Stock solutions are pre-made to known M

29 Practice 2.0 L of a 0.88 M solution are diluted to 3.8 L. What is the new molarity?

30 Practice You have 150 mL of 6.0 M HCl. What volume of 1.3 M HCl can you make?

31 Practice You need 450 mL of 0.15 M NaOH. All you have available is a 2.0 M stock solution of NaOH. How do you make the required solution?


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